Nice to see that dog had some good hustle. Took it in his stride, got up and kept chasing him. Notice how there's no proof of this fella making the net. Theatrics will get you nowhere against good fundamentals!

Oh man I know this is James' series but there's so much potential here to create rivalries in the office and have different episodes featuring different funhaus members - get that wrestling drama going in full force!

I would at least say that he has gone one step above and actually answered the question. Too often the hard and confrontational questions are left unanswered and the lack of response only creates more resentment.

I find it interesting that Jimmy Kimmel, Fallon, and Conan, all seem to be paying tribute to David Letterman by referring to his time at Late Night on NBC. At least to me, and definitely at least now, The Late Show feels very hacky unless David has a friend that he's interviewing. The Top Ten list especially frustrated me, since that felt from my first exposure to it that Dave was going through the motions. I understand that doing a daily, new, comedy show, is hard, but it's a pity that he didn't try to push the envelope further as his career progressed.

Strangely enough, it seems like it happened to Conan as well. Only in the last year or so has there been a realization that what people enjoyed about Conan was his willingness to showcase the absurd which simply and unfortunately did not fit into the Tonight Show format. While on the flipside, Seth Meyers' incarnation of the show strikes me as incredibly generic.

I guess my conclusion is this - the fragmentation of the late night talk show (or at least with the internet now, the daily variety comedy show), makes it harder to get away with playing to a broad audience. With Colbert taking the helm, lets hope he continues to push the envelope with smart, insightful humour that he's known and respected for.

It states that no international requests have been adhered to because these countries don't have jurisdiction over reddit's data, while the US does. Does this then mean that it might be worth considering moving reddit's parent entity to a more permissive country while still adhering to business best practice?

I remember when I used to sell video games trying to prevent this scenario as much as possible. The unfortunate reality is that so many of these decisions are made by people out of touch and wanting to get the best value purchase when the best games are most often the most expensive. I do remember specifically though when I first arrived that there was this massive excess of Gunstar Heroes for the GBA (this was 2008) which was heavily marked down, and I did my best to flaunt the shit out of that game. The fact that it'd be a game that some kid would be like, 'huh?', and then play it and be 'whoa!' and remember that game forever felt awesome. Eventually the game sold out and the other marked down GBA games did not really compare in quality so I didn't recommend them. A pity.